When Josie first meets Jim in the bar, she asks him for money to pay for his drinks and he pulls something out of his pocket and puts it on the table. Josie picks it up and it's a miniature (lapel) version of the Victoria Cross - the UK's highest military award. Its equivalent in the U.S. would be the Medal of Honor.
The version shown on TCM: the credits at the start of the movie appear to be reused from the silent version. The credits are not centered and are cut off on the left side, This is common with films that were filmed "silent" then turned into "sound" pictures. To squeeze in the sound track on the film, a part of the filmed portion needs to be removed thus skewing the film to the left. (This also happens when a sound-on-phonograph picture is turned onto a sound-on-film picture...but in this case a silent version was produced for theaters that were not yet wired for sound.)
This film's earliest documented telecasts took place in Altoona Tuesday 5 June 1956 on WFBG (Channel 10), and in Philadelphia Friday 20 July 1956 on WFIL (Channel 6). Aged and obscure, with forgotten players, sponsors rarely found any reason to take it off the shelf. Today it's archived in the TCM vaults, and only occasionally taken out for an airing, simply as a curiosity of a bygone era.
Josie (Sally O'Neil) is a girl with a bad past but she wants to get away from it.
Prologue: "Not all the casualties of war are in hospital cots. There are wounds of the spirit as lasting as those of the flesh, but less pitied, and little understood. Few know the dark fears brought back from the battlefront. Even fewer know that those fears may be cast out...but only by the mind that harbors them."